A History of the County of Lincoln: Volume 2. Originally published by Victoria County History, London, 1906.
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'Houses of Cistercian nuns: The priory of Greenfield', in A History of the County of Lincoln: Volume 2, ed. William Page (London, 1906), British History Online https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lincs/vol2/pp155-156 [accessed 31 January 2025].
'Houses of Cistercian nuns: The priory of Greenfield', in A History of the County of Lincoln: Volume 2. Edited by William Page (London, 1906), British History Online, accessed January 31, 2025, https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lincs/vol2/pp155-156.
"Houses of Cistercian nuns: The priory of Greenfield". A History of the County of Lincoln: Volume 2. Ed. William Page (London, 1906), British History Online. Web. 31 January 2025. https://prod.british-history.ac.uk/vch/lincs/vol2/pp155-156.
In this section
27. THE PRIORY OF GREENFIELD
The priory of Greenfield must have been founded before the year 1153 by Eudo of Grainsby and Ralf of Aby, his son: Ranulf earl of Chester was also a benefactor of the house. (fn. 1) It has very little history. A number of small and unimportant suits and charters have preserved for us the names of several prioresses, without giving us very much idea of the fortunes of the house. There are also a few notices relating to the priory in the episcopal registers. In 1298 a nun from Nuncotham was sent here to do penance. It appears that she was of a quarrelsome disposition, for Bishop Sutton ordered that as long as she should continue incorrigible she should be kept in solitary confinement, ' until according to the discipline of the order she should know how to live in community.' (fn. 2) Four years earlier the bishop had visited the priory and given the prioress an opportunity of resigning if she would, to avoid the disgrace of deprivation. (fn. 3) Her successor was not much more satisfactory, for in 1303 Bishop Dalderby heard that she had been absent from her house for two years, and that it was in danger of serious loss. (fn. 4) She probably resigned in consequence of the visitation which followed. (fn. 5) In 1312 the nuns received a remission of tithes from the same bishop in consideration of their poverty. (fn. 6) No other visitation is recorded until that of Bishop Atwater in 1519. There was very little at this time to complain of: one nun was accused of being disobedient to her superiors, and the prioress did not invite all the sisters to her table in due order. (fn. 7)
The priory was dissolved in 1536, before Michaelmas. Its income was at this time small, but the ten nuns who lived there on £63 a year were better off than their sisters at Nuncotham, Legbourne, or Fosse. The prioress received a pension of £10 a year, the rest were paid off as usual with 20s. apiece. (fn. 8)
The endowment included the demesne land with the churches of Aby, Cumberworth, and Beesby. (fn. 9) Greenfield church belonged to the priory in the time of Hugh of Wells. (fn. 10) In 1291 the prioress was not taxed for any temporalities. In 1428 she held fractions of a knight's fee in Aby and East Rasen. (fn. 11) In 1534 the nuns had an income of £63 4s. 1d. clear. (fn. 12) The Ministers' Accounts of 1536 give a total of £62 6s. 4d., including the manors of East Rasen and Moorby, Coningsby and Wilksby. (fn. 13) The bells, lead, &c., of the monastery were worth £135 8s. (fn. 14)
Prioresses Of Greenfield
Agnes, (fn. 15) occurs 1230
Mabel, (fn. 16) occurs 1237 and 1240
Maud, (fn. 17) occurs 1260
Joan Hey worth, (fn. 18) elected 1274
Christine, (fn. 19) resigned 1293
Elizabeth or Isabel of Harrington, (fn. 20) elected 1293, resigned 1301
Cecily de Parys, (fn. 21) elected 1301, resigned 1305
Agnes of Langholm, (fn. 22) elected 1305, resigned 1313
Ivetta of Ormsby, (fn. 23) elected 1313, occurs till 1327
Margaret of Wells, (fn. 24) elected 1330, occurs to 1349
Isabel, (fn. 25) occurs 1371
Joan, (fn. 26) occurs 1398
Margaret, (fn. 27) occurs 1401 and 1418
Joan, (fn. 28) occurs 1436
Elizabeth, (fn. 29) occurs 1485
Joan Skypwith, (fn. 30) occurs 1509, died 1518
Elizabeth Billesby, (fn. 31) elected 1518, died 1521
Isabel Smyth, (fn. 32) elected 1521, died 1530
Agnes or Anne Guderyk, (fn. 33) last prioress, elected 1530
The pointed oval seal (fn. 34) shows the Virgin, seated, with crown and nimbus, the Child, also with nimbus, on the right knee, her left hand lifted up.
SIGILLVM SANCTE [MAR]IE DE GRENEFELD